THE LA RAZA CRIME TIDAL WAVE - “These figures do not attempt to allege that foreign
nationals in the country illegally commit more
crimes than other groups,” the report states. “It
simply identifies thousands of crimes that should
not have occurred and thousands of victims that
should not have been victimized because the
perpetrator should not be here.”
CHARLOTTE CUTHBERTSON

Monday, October 8, 2018

The “zero tolerance” program was dismantled by Attorney
General Erc Holder once it had successfully cut the transit of
migrants by roughly 95 percent. Initially, officials made 140,000 arrests per
year in the mid-2000s, but the northward flow dropped so much that officials
only had to make 6,000 arrests in 2013, according to a 2014 letter by two
pro-migration Senators, Sen. Jeff Flake and John McCain.

Sonora State Attorney General Rodolfo Montes de Oca Mena and State Security Director for Public Safety Adolfo García Morales resigned on Friday after six police officers were gunned down by cartel gunmen inside 24 hours.

The state government confirmed the resignations in two separate press releases, according to local reports. Both cabinet-level secretaries resigned amid public blowback and a spike in cartel violence across the formerly peaceful state. Both Montes de Oca Mena and García Morales cited personal reasons for their departures and were thanked by Governor Claudia Pavlovich Arellano for their service beginning in 2015.

Sonora is currently experiencing a security crisis with cartel killings occurring daily. The state shares a border with Arizona and New Mexico.

A total of six municipal police officers were gunned down on Thursday. A convoy of cartel assassins attacked the Tactical Operations Group of the Municipal Police in Guaymas, leaving four officers dead and one seriously injured. An unarmed transit officer was also shot and killed as the gunmen fled the area.

On Friday morning, a Hermosillo Municipal Police Officer was murdered by a team of cartel gunmen as he was driving in his personal vehicle while off-duty, according to local reports. The cartel gunmen in two trucks opened fire on the officer, riddling him with rifle shots before fleeing. The shooters were later intercepted by municipal police who arrested five suspects in possession of weapons and tactical equipment. Also on Friday, an Esperanza Municipal Police Officer was wounded by unknown attackers, according to local media. The victim was transported to a local hospital for non-life-threatening wounds. Esperanza is located within the municipality of Cajeme.

The attacks come after the recent deployment of more than 200 federal and state police personnel, supported by elements of the Mexican Army, to once tourist-friendly Guaymas amid violence and threats of a cartel war. A security alert was issued by the U.S. consulate in Hermosillo, prohibiting federal employees from traveling to the popular tourist zones in San Carlos, Guaymas, and Empalme “due to recent violent criminal activity.” Concerns were raised at the time regarding a possible cartel war in Guaymas over the presumed murder of three operatives belonging to “Los Salazar” within the Sinaloa Cartel. They were vacationing there when they were arrested by municipal police. The trio was handed over to a rival criminal group.

Breitbart Texas recently reported on the escalation of violence in Sonora to include the shocking discovery of seven human heads abandoned in an ice cooler in mid-September.

Robert Arce is a retired Phoenix Police detective with extensive experience working Mexican organized crime and street gangs. Arce has worked in the Balkans, Iraq, Haiti, and recently completed a three-year assignment in Monterrey, Mexico, working out of the Consulate for the United States Department of State, International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Program, where he was the Regional Program Manager for Northeast Mexico (Coahuila, Tamaulipas, Nuevo Leon, Durango, San Luis Potosi, Zacatecas.) You can follow him on Twitter. He can be reached at robertrarce@gmail.com

REPORT: Catch and Release Continues Along Arizona Border

Local charity groups in southern Arizona report that “huge groups” of migrants recently apprehended by Border Patrol agents are being released into their care.

Breitbart Texas reported that Tucson and Yuma Sector Border Patrol officials described the illegal crossing of massive numbers of families and unaccompanied minors as a “humanitarian crisis.” The number of these classifications of migrants doubled in recent months. It appears this is forcing another round of catch and release by U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP).

A group of more than 100 migrants showed up at a Tucson church over the weekend, the Arizona Daily Star reported Monday. Volunteers scrambled to set up a makeshift shelter in their gym and provided clothes, food, and toys.

Catholic Community Services’ Teresa Cavendish told the local newspaper that about 700 migrants — including pregnant women and parents with children — appear to be being released by CBP officials as “part of a national directive.”

Cavendish said that Yuma Sector officials were also releasing migrants who are expected to be taken to the Phoenix area.

Breitbart Texas reached out to Yuma and Tucson Sector officials for confirmation of the migrant releases. Due to the Columbus Day federal holiday, a response was not immediately available.

The newspaper reported there is not enough bed space for the massive numbers of migrants being apprehended by Border Patrol agents along the Arizona border with Mexico. Those who appear to pose no security risk are required to provide their intended destination in the U.S. and report to an immigration officer near that destination within a few weeks. Some of the migrants are reportedly wearing ankle monitors equipped with GPS tracking technology.

The church groups are reportedly assisting the migrants in reaching family members at their destination who can then make travel arrangements. The most cited destinations appear to be Texas, Tennessee, and Florida, the newspaper reported.

The organizers are facing problems obtaining transportation for the migrants as bus service is overwhelmed by the numbers of families and the number of scheduled runs being reduced because of storms in the southeastern U.S.

“Buses are sold out by the time they get here,” Cavendish told the reporter.

Border Patrol officials in the Yuma and Tucson Sectors reported near doubling of the number of migrant families and unaccompanied minors who are risking their lives to cross the Arizona desert in the heat of the summer.

A recent report released by U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) reveals that the illegal crossing of Family Unit Aliens (FMUA) and Unaccompanied Alien Children (UAC) increased from 13,181 in Fiscal Year 2017 year-to-date (YTD) reports to 25,911 in Fiscal Year 2018 – a 98 percent increase, according to the August Southwest Border Migration report. Yuma and Tucson Sector officials reported these classes of migrants are crossing in large numbers from Mexico into the southern Arizona desert where at least 83 migrants died during calendar year 2018.

Yuma Sector officials reported the largest increases in both FMUA and UAC categories. The apprehension of FMUAs in the Yuma Sector increased from 5,429 in FY2017 to 12,367 — a 128 percent increase, CBP officials stated. UAC apprehensions almost doubled in this sector, rising from 2,534 in FY2017 to 5,060.

Tucson Sector officials also witnessed a doubling in the number of family units apprehended in the desert. During the first 11 months of FY2017, agents arrested 1,907 families who illegally crossed from Mexico into the U.S. This more than doubled to 3,860 during the same period in FY2018, officials reported. Unaccompanied minors actually outnumbered family units during FY2018 in this sector. Agents 4,624 UACs in FY2017 — up from 3,311 in FY2017 (a 40 percent increase).

Bob Price serves as associate editor and senior political news contributor for Breitbart Texas. He is a founding member of the Breitbart Texas team. Follow him on Twitter @BobPriceBBTX and Facebook.

Border Patrol Spread Thin by ‘Humanitarian Crisis’ at Arizona Border

Border Patrol officials in the Tucson and Yuma Sectors say human smugglers are raking in profits while risking the lives of migrants moving in escalated numbers into Arizona.

Despite increased enforcement efforts, a summer of record-breaking temperatures, and other dangers inherent to the Arizona desert, human smugglers are crossing large numbers of migrant families and unaccompanied children into the U.S. Multiple areas along the border, including the Yuma and Ajo corridors, are being exploited, according to U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials.

“This is a humanitarian crisis that is impacting border security,” Yuma Sector Chief Patrol Agent Anthony Porvaznik said in a written statement. “Criminal entities are lining their pockets while exploiting a vulnerable population, filling our stations and diverting our national security efforts.”

Officials say the new smuggling operations are a dangerous break from the past when migrant families and children would present themselves at ports of entry to request asylum. They are now being moved through remote areas of the desert where no physical barriers, or ineffective barriers, are in place to prevent illegal crossings.

“With no regard for the safety and well-being of these families, smugglers put their bottom line before human decency,” Joint Task Force West, Arizona Commander Rodolfo Karisch stated. “Tuesday we sent agents out to rescue 61 of these individuals from rising flood waters; and Wednesday, shortly after crossing the border, a mother in one of these groups passed away in front of her son.”

Human smugglers in northern Mexico are apparently learning from cartels operating south of the Rio Grande Valley and Laredo Sectors that when the border is flooded with migrant families and unaccompanied minors, Border Patrol resources are stressed. Cartels are then able to smuggle drugs and other “high-value human cargo” across the border with a greater opportunity for success.

During the past six weeks, Commander Karisch reports the following large groups of illegal immigrants apprehended in the Yuma and Tucson Sectors:

Oct. 2 — Yuma Sector encountered 164 adults and children west of the San Luis Port of Entry.

Sept. 25 — Ajo Station Border Patrol agents encountered 264 adults and children west of the Lukeville Port of Entry.

Sept. 20 — Yuma Sector Border Patrol agents encountered 275 adults and children, 20 of whom had to be transported to the hospital to be treated for a range of conditions including: back and ankle injuries, lacerations, lice infestation, and impetigo.

Sept. 16 — Ajo Station Border Patrol agents encountered 193 adults and children west of the Lukeville Port of Entry.

Sept. 8 — Ajo Station Border Patrol agents encountered 121 adults and children near the Senita Basin north of Lukeville.

Sept. 4 — Ajo Station Border Patrol agents encountered 163 adults and children west of Lukeville’s Port of Entry.

Aug. 28 — Ajo Station Border Patrol agents encountered 103 adults and children west of Lukeville’s Port of Entry.

Aug. 20 — Ajo Station agents encountered 128 illegal immigrants who had been abandoned by their smugglers.

Officials say the majority of migrants came to the U.S. illegally from Guatemala. They are reportedly headed to locations in Charleston, South Carolina; Oakland, California; and Homestead, Florida.

CBP officials interviewed the migrants and found similarities in persons encountered and their stated reasons for coming to the United States. “They are lied to by smugglers who make promises of assistance, financial gain, and protected immigration status,” officials stated. “According to migrants, smugglers are using coercive tactics to profit from vulnerable families.”

Bob Price serves as associate editor and senior political news contributor for Breitbart Texas. He is a founding member of the Breitbart Texas team. Follow him on Twitter @BobPriceBBTX and Facebook.

Yuma Sector Border Patrol agents apprehended 164 migrants during a five-hour period Tuesday night and Wednesday morning. The sector is witnessing an increase of illegal border crossings–primarily consisting of family units and unaccompanied minors.

Yuma Station agents came upon two “huge groups” of migrants during a five-hour period that began shortly before midnight on Tuesday and ended a few hours later. The discoveries led to the arrest of 164 illegal immigrants in a small section of the border just west of the San Luis port of entry, according to Tucson Sector Border Patrol officials.

In the first incident, the agents found a group of 108 who crossed the border illegally about a half-mile west of the San Luis port of entry, officials stated. The incident occurred shortly before midnight Tuesday. The agents reported the group’s composition as mostly family units and unaccompanied minors from Central America.

About five hours later, agents came upon another group of 58 wishing to surrender to authorities. This incident occurred in about the same area during early morning hours Wednesday.

Officials reported that 88 children crossed the border with 76 adults. The children ranged in age from 3 months to 17 years. Eight of the migrants came to the U.S. from Honduras while 156 traveled from Guatemala.

The 164 migrants will be processed for immigration violations under Yuma Sector guidelines, officials reported.

The number of migrant families making the dangerous trek to illegally cross the border from Mexico into the Arizona desert nearly doubled from FY2017 to FY2018, Breitbart Texas reported.

A recent report released by U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) reveals that the illegal crossing of Family Unit Aliens (FMUA) and Unaccompanied Alien Children (UAC) increased from 13,181 in Fiscal Year 2017 year-to-date (YTD) reports to 25,911 in Fiscal Year 2018 – a 98 percent increase, according to the August Southwest Border Migration report. Yuma and Tucson Sector officials reported these classes of migrants are crossing in large numbers from Mexico into the southern Arizona desert where at least 83 migrants died during calendar year 2018, the Missing Migrant Project reports.

Yuma Sector officials reported the largest increases in both FMUA and UAC categories. The apprehension of FMUAs in the Yuma Sector increased from 5,429 in FY2017 to 12,367 — a 128 percent increase, CBP officials stated. UAC apprehensions almost doubled in this sector, rising from 2,534 in FY2017 to 5,060.

“With the 128 percent increase in family unit apprehensions and 100 percent increase in unaccompanied alien children apprehensions in Yuma Sector, compared to the same time last year, we want to emphasize the extreme hazards that accompany crossing the border illegally during the summer months.” Yuma Sector Chief Patrol Agent Anthony Porvaznik told Breitbart Texas in response to an email inquiry. “With peak days reaching close to 130 degrees, parents who are planning on crossing the border illegally need to seriously reconsider the possibly fatal dangers they will not only be subjecting themselves to, but their children as well.”

Bob Price serves as associate editor and senior political news contributor for Breitbart Texas. He is a founding member of the Breitbart Texas team. Follow him on Twitter @BobPriceBBTX and Facebook.

Attorney General Jeff Sessions blasts Trump’s DACA sell out…. Will Sessions move to impeach the Swamp Keeper who hired 70 illegals to work “cheap” at Mar-a-Lago?

Border Patrol agents in the El Centro Sector arrested a DACA recipient for allegedly smuggling more than 17 pounds of methamphetamine on Tuesday morning.

Agents assigned to the Highway 86 immigration checkpoint observed a Kia Optima approaching for inspection. Agents referred the 22-year-old Mexican man to a secondary station. The agents identified the man as a recipient of President Barack Obama’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) amnesty program.

A K-9 agent alerted to the possible presence of drugs or humans in the trunk of the Optima. Agents reportedly discovered 14 vacuum-sealed packages in the trunk, according to U.S. Custom and Border Protection officials.

Agents examined the packages and determined they were packed with 17.14 pounds of methamphetamine. Officials estimated the street value of the drugs at $34,284.

The agents arrested the DACA recipient on drug smuggling charges and seized the vehicle and drugs. All were turned over to the Drug Enforcement Administration for investigation.

“Every drug seizure our agents make is an important step forward to secure our streets from dangerous narcotics and dangerous people,” El Centro Chief Patrol Agent Gloria I. Chavez said in a written statement. “I commend our agents for the hard work and dedication in keeping our communities safe.”

Officials did not disclose when the Mexican national illegally entered the U.S. or when he received DACA protections.

During Fiscal Year 2018, El Centro Sector Border Patrol agents seized nearly 1,650 pounds of the dangerous drug. The seizure of these drugs deprived drug cartels and dealers of approximately $4.3 million worth of drug sales at street value.

Bob Price serves as associate editor and senior political news contributor for Breitbart Texas. He is a founding member of the Breitbart Texas team. Follow him on Twitter @BobPriceBBTX and Facebook.

Mark Levin:

‘Unbridled Immigration, Legal and Illegal, Is Taking the Country Down’

“Through love of having children we're going to take over."Augustin Cebada, Information Minister of Brown Berets, militant para-military soldiers of Aztlan shouting at U.S. citizens at an Independence Day rally in Los Angeles, 7/4/96

This annual income for an impoverished American family is $10,000 less than the more than $34,500 in federal funds which are spent on each unaccompanied minor border crosser.

A study by Tom Wong of the University of California at San Diego discovered that more than 25 percent of DACA-enrolled illegal aliens in the program have anchor babies. That totals about 200,000 anchor babies who are the children of DACA-enrolled illegal aliens. This does not include the anchor babies of DACA-qualified illegal aliens. JOHN BINDER

WE COULD END MEXICO’S INVASION IF WE PUT EMPLOYERS OF ILLEGALS IN JAIL

NumbersUSA’s Rosemary Jenks:

E-Verify Ignored in DACA Negotiations Because ‘Members of Congress Know It Will Work’

Members of Congress broadly oppose a legislative nationwide E-Verify mandate for employers because “they know it will work,” said NumbersUSA’s Rosemary Jenks, explaining why E-Verify is not being pushed in congressional negotiations for an amnesty deal for recipients of the Obama administration’s Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA). Jenks further noted that both parties are beholden to special interests supportive of “mass migration.”

AMERICAN POVERTY and the LA RAZA MEXICAN WELFARE STATE on AMERICA’S BACKS.

GRAPHIC: Gulf Cartel Gunmen Kill, Dump Woman in Mexican Border State

MONTERREY, Nuevo León — Gulf Cartel hitmen tracked down and murdered a woman who is believed to be one of their former members who had gone into hiding in this border state. The cartel gunmen left the woman’s body on a dirt road and used a knife to stab a posterboard riddled with numerous threats.

A Nuevo León law enforcement source revealed to Breitbart Texas that a team of gunmen from Mexico’s Gulf Cartel (CDG) drove a pickup to the Bosques de La Silla in the suburb of Juarez to dump the woman’s body and flee the area. The posterboard identified the woman as “Luna” or “La Luna”.

The woman whose name has not yet been confirmed was found facing down on a dirt road. She had been tortured and is believed to have been murdered in another place and was dumped in the area. She had a tattoo with the name Renata in her right hand.

The message on the posterboard stated: “The world is small traitorous Luna this will happen to those who stand against the Metros from Reynosa wether its mafia or government, a betrayal is not forgiven. Atte Jefe Primito (Boss Little Cousin) and Comandante Mono (Commander Monkey)”.

Also over the weekend, a group of gunmen, also from the Gulf Cartel, under the leadership of Commander 23 placed several banners in the state of San Luis Potosi warning about upcoming murders targeting robbers and extortionists pointing to a shift in strategy by the Gulf Cartel in the region.

As Large Groups of Illegal Aliens Keep Pouring In, A Majority Have 3 U.S. Destinations in Mind

A Border Patrol vehicle travels a wilderness road on the Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Reserve near Ajo, Arizona. (Photo by David McNew/Getty Images)

(CNSNews.com) - Border patrol agents say they continue to apprehend large groups of illegal immigrants, many from Guatemala, who increasingly are being led into remote desert areas of the United States by human smugglers who have deceived them with promises of financial gain and protected immigration status.

"Multiple areas along the Yuma and Ajo (Arizona) corridors are being exploited by criminal organizations," Customs and Border Protection announced last Friday.

Based on interviews with members of these large groups, CBP said a "majority" of the illegal immigrants have three final destinations in mind: Charleston, S.C.; Oakland, Calif.; and Homestead, Fla.

Border Patrol agents say they are tracking the illegal immigrants around the clock, given the "significant" influx. "With more family units being smuggled into these areas, agents must divert even greater resources to care and treat those harmed by the arduous journey," CBP said.

Last Tuesday, for example, CBP agents rescued 61 people from rising flood waters; and last Wednesday, shortly after crossing the border, a mother in one of the groups died in front of her son.

"Migrants are suffering dehydration, illness, injuries and death at the hands of smugglers. Border Patrol agents are alarmed and concerned by the continuous influx of migrants found in life threatening and vulnerable situations," CBP announced.

In the last six weeks, Arizona Border Patrol agents have arrested:

-- 164 adults and children west of the San Luis Port of Entry on Oct. 2 (Yuma Sector);

-- 264 adults and children west of the Lukeville Port of Entry on Sept. 25 (Ajo Station)

-- 275 adults and children on Sept. 20 (Yuma); (CBP said 20 were hospitalized for back and ankle injuries, lacerations, lice infestation, and impetigo.)

-- 193 adults and children west of the Lukeville Port of Entry on Sept. 16;

-- 121 adults and children near the Senita Basin north of Lukeville on Sept. 9 (Ajo)

-- 163 adults and children west of Lukeville’s Port of Entry on Sept. 4 (Ajo)

-- 103 adults and children west of Lukeville’s Port of Entry on Aug. 28 (Ajo)

-- 128 illegal immigrants who had been abandoned by their smugglers on Aug. 20 (Ajo).

In August, 37,544 illegal crossers were apprehended at Southwest border, the most since May 2018 when 40,335 were apprehended.

In August, the number of family unit apprehensions increased 38 percent to 12,774, 3,527 more than July. In August, the number of family units apprehended represented 34 percent of all Southwest Border apprehensions, an increase from an average of 25 percent for the year.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection welcomes reports of suspicious activity from the community. The toll-free number to call is 1-877-872-7435/

The Ajo Station's area of responsibility encompasses over 64 miles along the international border and nearly 7,000 square miles of operational area, including the Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument, Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge, Bureau of Land Management lands, Barry M. Goldwater Bombing Range, and Tohono O'Odham Nation.

The Yuma Sector is comprised of 181,670 square miles of primarily desert terrain divided between California and Arizona. It covers 126 miles of United States Border, from the Imperial Sand Dunes in California to the Yuma-Pima County line. This area consists of vast open deserts, rocky mountain ranges, large drifting sand dunes and the Colorado River.

Child Sex Offender Busted After Illegally Crossing Arizona Border

Tucson Sector Border Patrol agents stopped another previously deported child sex offender from successfully re-entering the U.S. Immigration officers previously deported the Mexican national after a Florida court convicted him for sex offenses involving a child.

Ajo Station agents encountered the 41-year-old man after he illegally crossed the border near Why, Arizona. During a biometric background investigation at the station, agents identified the man as Jose Rivera-Fuentes, a Mexican national with a criminal history and a previous deportation, according to information obtained by Breitbart Border News from U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) officials.

The agents learned that a court in Bradenton, Florida, convicted the Mexican man on a charge of lewd and lascivious acts with a minor in 2014. The court sentenced Rivera-Fuentes to one year in jail. Immigration officers removed him from the U.S. following his prison sentence.

The Mexican national now faces new felony charges for illegal re-entry after removal as a sex offender. If convicted, Rivera-Fuentes could face up to 20 years in a U.S. federal prison.

Earlier this month, agents in the Tucson and Yuma Sectors stopped three criminal aliens from making their way back into the U.S., Breitbart Texas reported. Records revealed that two of the criminal aliens had convictions for sex offenses and the third has a conviction for kidnapping, according to CBP.

In September, Rio Grande Valley Sector agents stopped five previously deported sex offenders from successfully re-entering the U.S. from Mexico. Their crimes included sexual battery, sexual exploitation of a minor, lewd and lascivious acts with a child under the age of 14, and child pornography.

Bob Price serves as associate editor and senior political news contributor for Breitbart Border/Cartel Chronicles. He is a founding member of the Breitbart Texas team. Follow him on Twitter @BobPriceBBTX and Facebook.